Economic growth, renewable energy and financial development in the CPTPP countries

The trade agreement is generally considered an effective mechanism to encourage trading activities. However, trade activities may lead to environmental degradation because more trade is generally associated with more energy consumption. In addition, financial development with an increased flow of capital among members is required to fund trading activities. Renewable energy can be a moderating factor to balance the effects of trade activities and financial development on the economy and the environment. This paper focuses on the inter-relationship between growth-energy-finance nexus for the CPTPP members in the 1971–2020 period. While the energy-growth-environment nexus has been extensively investigated, the energy-growth-finance relationship has been largely ignored in existing literature, particularly for the CPTPP countries. Our findings can be summarized as follows. First, we find that renewable energy consumption does reduce CO2 emission while financial development does not necessarily increase environmental degradation. Second, financial development is found to cause renewable energy usage bilaterally. Finally, when different proxies are used for financial development, a bilateral causality relationship between renewable energy usage, financial development and economic growth is confirmed. These important findings imply that the governments of the CPTPP countries should encourage renewable energy usage to achieve the dual objectives from the CPTPP trade agreement: (i) to increase trade activities; and (ii) to support further financial development within the region. These two objectives together support economic growth.


Introduction
The trade agreement is widely seen as a catalyst for advancing global free trade and accelerating economic growth. Free trade agreements have increased from 19 in 1990 to 292 in 2019 [1]. A trade agreement is generally used to benefit countries through trade creation and market expansion by eliminating trade barriers and liberalizing foreign investment. They can also expand to different aspects, such as services, procurement, intellectual property rights, regulatory cooperation, and sustainable development. However, a growing concern about the prospect of increased trade could lead to environmental degradation. Countries with comparative advantages in products causing pollution may be incentivized to specialize in producing those further environmental degradation) arising from this trade agreement is considered essential. Therefore, considerations now focus on the role of renewable energy in these countries. The higher-income countries are generally better at transitioning from coal and fossil fuel to renewable energy sources. For instance, in New Zealand, renewable energy accounts for 40 per cent of the country's total energy consumption in 2019. In Australia, 24 per cent of electricity was generated by renewable energy, with over 50 per cent of South Australia's energy coming from renewable sources. Canada and Japan also record relatively high renewable usage proportions at 17.3 and 18.5 per cent in the total energy mix [8,9]. Another group of members involves middle-income countries that have successfully adopted renewable energy. Chile has achieved the highest growth of solar energy globally, with renewable energy accounting for 23.3 per cent of the country's total energy generation. With sizeable crude oil and natural gas reserves, Mexico has generated 20.8 per cent of electricity from clean energy, of which 15.5 per cent comes from renewable energy [8,9]. Finally, some CPTPP countries have been lagging in renewable energy consumption. For example, Singapore has to import almost all its energy needs because of the scarcity of natural resources. Brunei has only 0.05 per cent of its energy usage coming from solar energy since the country is highly rich in fossil fuel. Malaysia (2 per cent), Peru (2.7 per cent) and Vietnam's (9 per cent) low renewable energy usage are mainly derived from the lack of comprehensive plans implemented by the governments of these countries [8,9].
The contributions of this paper to the existing literature are threefold. First, the paper focuses exclusively on the trans-pacific region due to the recent establishment of the CPTPP trade agreement in 2018. Findings from the paper provide direct implications for policies in the region concerning the inter-relationship between economic growth, renewable energy and financial development. Second, while the fundamental relationship between economic growth and environmental degradation is examined, the benefits of enhancing financial development from trade agreements are also considered in this analysis. Financial development has largely been ignored in the growth-environment nexus, particularly for the CPTPP countries. An increase in trade activities from the agreement is expected to support economic growth. However, increased energy consumption is generally associated with further environmental degradation when energy mainly comes from fossil fuel sources. Financial development plays an important role in providing a basis for shifting energy consumption from fossil fuel to renewable sources. As such, we consider that the role of financial development should be considered in any growth-energy nexus. Third, the causality relationship between economic growth, renewable energy and financial development is also investigated in this paper. Findings from this causality analysis provide policy implications for countries in the region to balance and enhance the economic benefits from the trade agreement and simultaneously minimize the negative impacts on the environment.
The structure of this paper is as follows. Following this introduction, section 2 discusses related studies. Section 3 presents the research methodology and data. Empirical findings are then discussed in section 4. Finally, section 5 provides conclusions and policy implications.

Literature review
In recent years, the relationship between economic growth and environmental degradation has gained significant attention among scholars, focusing on the validity of the environmental Kuznets curve (EKC) hypothesis. This EKC hypothesis states that economic growth leads to environmental damage at a low level and then improves the quality of the environment after a specific threshold of economic growth is achieved. The hypothesis implies that environmental quality is negatively affected by economic growth at the early stage. However, at high-income levels, economic growth improves environmental quality. The relationship between economic growth and environmental degradation follows an inverted U-shaped relationship. The EKC hypothesis receives criticism from various scholars. [10] consider that the EKC hypothesis is an essentially empirical phenomenon. The author argues that most estimates of EKC models are not statistically robust. The author also considers that concentrations of selected local pollutants have declined in developed countries. However, many pollutants have increased the levels of emissions. As such, the drivers of changes in pollution cannot be identified. Other scholars are also skeptical about the validity of the EKC hypothesis [11][12][13]. On the empirical aspects, we note that findings from empirical studies on the validity of the EKC hypothesis are mixed.
On the supportive side [14], employ the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) model to investigate the validity of the EKC hypothesis in Malaysia over the period 1980-2008. The study confirms an inverted U-sharped relationship between income and environmental degradation in the long run but not in the short run. Their findings imply that the EKC is a longrun phenomenon. Similarly [15], investigate the inter-relationship among CO 2 emission, economic growth, value-added agriculture and energy consumption for seven major emerging economies including China, India, Brazil, Mexico, Russia, Indonesia, and Turkey for the 1990-2014 period. The study supports the validity of the EKC hypothesis in the long run. Their findings also confirm a bidirectional causality relationship between non-renewable energy usage and CO 2 emissions. Findings from [16] study failed to support the linear relationship between CO 2 emissions, energy consumption, and economic growth in five ASEAN countries (including Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand). Their findings confirm a nonlinear relationship among these variables. Furthermore, the study finds that environmental degradation initially increased with economic growth and decreased when per capita gross domestic product (GDP) was above 4,686 USD. Using a sample of 19 nations in the G20 group [17], confirm that agriculture increased CO 2 emissions in developing countries, while renewable energy consumption reduces the CO 2 emissions in developed countries. [3] utilize bootstrap rolling window estimation of vector autoregressive (VAR) model for the United States from 1966 to 2013. Findings from this study confirm that the effects of economic growth on CO 2 emissions increased from 1982 to 1996 and decreased from 1996 to 2013. This finding is consistent with the U-shaped EKC hypothesis. [18] use the ARDL estimation technique to examine the validity of the EKC hypothesis in Vietnam over the 1974-2016 period. Findings from this study confirm the existence of the EKC hypothesis in the long run, while evidence on EKC is not found in the short run.
On the other hand, many empirical studies have provided evidence against the validity of the EKC hypothesis. For example [4], examine the causality link between CO 2 emissions and economic growth in Vietnam for the 1981-2011 period. The results show that economic growth was positively related to pollution in both the short and long run. Therefore, economic growth is associated with pollution, proxied by CO 2 emissions. These findings reject the validity of the EKC hypothesis in Vietnam. Also, capital is found to positively affect CO 2 emissions. This finding indicates that an increased capital appears to be associated with the non-renewable-energy-intensive industries whereas the an increase in labour force may be linked with the emergence of lesser non-renewable-energy-intensive industries. Finally, we note that previous studies regarding the EKC hypothesis often assume a quadratic form between economic growth and CO 2 emission.
In addition, findings from [5] analysis show that a non-parametric model confirms a positive relationship between CO 2 emissions and economic activity without a turning point. These authors used a sample of the Middle-East and North Africa (MENA) countries from 1980 to 2010 and rejected the validity of the EKC hypothesis in these countries. Based on an ARDL framework, findings from [19] analysis reject the validity of the EKC hypothesis in Peru from 1980 to 2011 by comparing the long-and short-run elasticities of economic growth on the estimated coefficients of the CO 2 emissions. The conclusion is drawn on the observation that the long-run estimated elasticity is greater than the estimated coefficient in the short run. Using the vector error-correction model (VECM) and data on Malaysia over the period 1975-2011 [6], show evidence against the validity of the EKC hypothesis. Finally [7], examine the nexus between renewable energy, growth and environmental quality for Canada and Australia over the 1960-2015 period. The paper's main findings confirm that economic growth increases CO 2 emissions in both the short run and long run and that renewable energy usage decreases emissions in the short run.
Also, mixed evidence is found regarding the validity of the EKC hypothesis in empirical studies. [20] examine the validity of the inverted U-shaped relationship between economic growth and environmental degradation using a sample of five ASEAN countries during the 1971-2009 period. The study utilizes the ARDL approach and Granger causality test on the VECM framework. Their results on the validity of the EKC hypothesis are mixed from this research sample. For example, the validity of the EKC hypothesis is confirmed in Singapore and Thailand but not in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines. Empirical findings from their analysis confirm mixed results. [21] examines the relationship between renewable and non-renewable electricity consumption and economic growth for 26 OECD countries over 1980-2015. Using two different panel causality approaches, including the Dumitrescu-Hurlin time-domain approach and Croux and Reusens frequency domain approach, their analysis confirms the bidirectional relationship between economic growth and non-renewable electricity consumption.
As an interesting note, selected empirical studies suggest the N-shaped relationship between CO 2 emissions and economic growth. [22] argue that different research samples, including the panel data and time-series analysis for individual countries, may yield different findings. The authors find supportive evidence for the EKC hypothesis using the panel mean group estimators for the sample of 20 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) countries. However, findings from only 9 out of 20 countries confirm the validity of the EKC hypothesis when each of these 20 OECD countries is considered, and six of them have a second turning point in the relationship between economic growth and CO 2 emissions. An increase of CO 2 emissions when income reaches the second turning point suggests an N-shaped rather than a U-shaped relationship between CO 2 emissions and economic growth in these countries. The N-shaped relationship between CO 2 emissions and economic growth is found in Vietnam in the long run. However, this relationship cannot be established in the short run [23].
Another strand of research emphasizes the causal relationship between CO 2 emissions and economic growth. A seminal work by [24] reveals a causality from CO 2 emissions to economic growth in the long run, without the feedback effects from economic growth to CO 2 emissions in Malaysia for the 1971-1999 period. However, the result is only significant at a 10 per cent significance level. [26] confirm a bidirectional causality between CO 2 emissions and economic growth in the short run in Malaysia over 1971-2015 when the VECM Granger causality test is used. Finally [27], investigate the effects of income on CO 2 emissions for each of the five ASEAN countries, including Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Indonesia using the Johansen cointegration test within the VECM framework. They find a bidirectional causality relationship between economic growth and CO 2 emissions in Indonesia and Thailand in the long run. In the short run, a unidirectional causality from economic growth to CO 2 emissions is also found for these two countries. Moreover, their results confirm a unidirectional relationship from economic growth to CO 2 emissions in Malaysia and a bidirectional relationship in the Philippines and Singapore in the short run.
Our literature indicates that the relationship between economic growth, energy consumption, and environmental degradation has been extensively investigated in the existing literature. However, the inter-relationship between economic growth, renewable energy usage and financial development appears to be under-estimated, particularly for the CPTPP countries. Table 1 below presents a comprehensive summary of findings from papers examining the impacts and causal relationship between carbon emissions and economic growth and the EKC hypothesis and between carbon emissions, renewable energy, alternative and nuclear energy, and economic growth.
Our literature review highlights many important issues to the empirical investigation described below. These important issues are related to a careful examination of the growthrenewable energy-finance in the long run for the CPTPP countries. In addition, as presented in Table 1 below, many studies have been conducted to examine the growth-energy-environment nexus. However, it appears that countries joining the CPTPP trade agreement in 2018 have largely been neglected in these previous empirical analyses. This study is conducted to examine the inter-relationship between economic growth, renewable energy consumption, and financial development for the countries in the CPTPP agreement. In addition, our analysis also examines the causality relationship between these three aspects to provide empirical evidence on this important link.

Model
The following model is used to examine the growth-energy-finance using a sample of the 11 countries from the CPTPP agreement. We select these variables in the regression equations based on empirical studies on the research topic [37][38][39][40][41][42][43][44] where CO 2 denotes CO2 emission, GDPpc represents economic growth, GDP 2 pc is a square of economic growth to examine the validity of the EKC hypothesis in these countries, EC denotes energy consumption, REC denotes renewable energy consumption, FD denotes financial development, and ε represents error term.

Data
Data are collected from the World Development Indicators (WDI) from the World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF). Our dataset consists of 11 CPTPP countries, namely Australia, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Japan, Mexico, Malaysia, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore, Vietnam. The 1970-2020 period is used in this paper. This research period presents the longest possible period to ensure the data availability required for our analysis. Details of variables are reported in Table 2. Descriptive statistics are presented in Table 3. Descriptive statistics of the variables for our panel sample are shown in Table 2. For the CO 2 emission, its highest level and lowest level are 25 and 0.301, respectively. The mean and median of the CO 2 emission across these CPTPP countries are 8.102 and 7.305. On the first difference of the CO 2 emission, its maximum value is 3.747 whereas the minimum value is -6.074. Economic growth has the highest mean value of 23,211 and a minimum mean of 432. The highest first difference in economic growth is 413 and a minimum of -2,441.

The cross-sectional dependence test
We employ the Pesaran CD test [45] to consider the cross-sectional dependence in this study. Ignoring cross-sectional dependence in the panel data analysis may produce inconsistent  An empty cell means that the causal relationship was not recorded.
Source: [26] and updated studies. estimates. The CD statistics can be written as follows: CD ¼ ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi ffi wherer 2 ij denotes the correlation coefficients of residuals, N and T represent the cross-section and time dimensions. The CD statistics are asymptotically normally distributed if T and N go to infinity.

Slope homogeneity test
Besides the cross-sectional dependence, slope homogeneity is another issue of panel data. [46] note that the assumption of slope homogeneity would potentially ignore country-specific characteristics. As such, findings may provide a misleading conclusion. In this paper, we use the slope homogeneity test developed by [47]: where S and Δ are test statistics, β i and β WFE are estimates from the pooled ordinary least squares and the weighted fixed effect pooled estimator; χ i denotes the matrix of independent variables in deviations from the mean; M T is the identity matrix;s 2 i is an estimate of s 2 i ; k is

Panel unit root test
We use the second-generation panel unit root test-the cross-sectional augmented Dickey-Fuller (CADF) developed by [48] to examine the stationarity of the considered variables. The CADF allows cross-sectional dependence. The test statistics are as follows: where N is the number of panels. The CADF i statistics are t-statistics from: where D� y tÀ j and � y tÀ j are cross-sectional averages of first differences and lagged levels of y, respectively.

Panel cointegration test
Next, we use the panel cointegration test developed by [49] to examine the long-run equilibrium relationship among variables.
The augmented Dickey-Fuller test is obtained from the estimation of the following model: where θ is selected to ensure that v it is serially uncorrelated.

Panel Granger causality test
The [50] panel's Granger causality test is employed to examine the direction of causality among the variables of interest. The method has an advantage as it considers cross-sectional dependence. The test involves the following regression: where θ i and δ i are vectors of estimates of lagged dependent variables and explanatory variables. The Granger causality test involves test statistics δ i . The null hypothesis has no Granger causality, whereas the alternative hypothesis has at least one Granger causality. These hypotheses can be rewritten as follows:

Empirical results from the cross-sectional dependence test
Using the [45,51] CD test, this study examines cross-section dependence. The empirical results, shown in Table 4, confirm cross-section dependence, indicating that the estimators allowing cross-section dependence are suitable in this study.

Empirical results from the slope homogeneity test
In this section, we perform the slope homogeneity test. The empirical results, shown in Table 5, reveal that the null hypothesis of slope homogeneity is rejected by Δ and Δ adj statistics. The empirical findings and those presented in Section 5.1 imply that the estimation techniques used in this study should allow both cross-sectional dependence and slope homogeneity.

Empirical results from the panel unit root test
Using the unit root tests developed by [48], we examine the stationarity and the integration order of the variables used in this paper. Pesaran's test is employed because it allows cross-sectional dependence. The empirical results reported in Table 6 reveal that all variables contain unit root at the level whereas their first differences are stationary. Overall, we find that variables used in our analysis are integrated at I (1). This finding indicates that a long-run equilibrium relationship between the employed variables may exist.

Empirical results from the panel cointegration test
We note that all employed variables are integrated at I (1). We employ a panel cointegration test to examine the long-run equilibrium relationship. The empirical results presented in Table 7 suggest that all panels are cointegrated. These findings imply a long-run equilibrium relationship between variables. This finding indicates that Granger causality should be considered in this study.

Empirical results for the energy-growth-finance relationship in the CPTPP countries
This section presents the empirical results using the common correlated effects mean group (CCEMG) and the augmented mean group (AMG). The CCEMG and AMG estimation techniques are appropriate in this study because these estimation techniques allow both cross-sectional dependence and slope heterogeneity in the panel data analysis. The estimates are shown in Table 8 below.
First, our empirical results cannot confirm the relationship between CO 2 emission and economic growth during the research period for the CPTPP countries. No evidence supports the view that economic growth leads to environmental degradation in the CPTPP countries. The estimated coefficients of the GDP per capita (GDPpc) and the squared GDP per capita (GDPpc 2 ) are statistically insignificant. These findings confirm that the validity of the EKC hypothesis cannot be confirmed in the CPTPP countries during the research period. This finding is consistent with findings from the [4] study. Second, our empirical finding indicates the estimated coefficients of the energy consumption (EC) are statistically significant at a one per cent level of significance in both estimation techniques. These findings indicate that an increase in energy consumption from fossil fuel sources is associated with increased CO 2 emissions, leading to environmental degradation. This evidence is consistent with [20] study. Third, findings from this paper confirm that renewable energy consumption significantly

PLOS ONE
Economic growth, renewable energy, environmental degradation, financial development, CPTPP reduces CO 2 emissions because the estimated coefficients of renewable energy usage (REC) are negative and statistically significant at a one per cent level of significance under both estimation techniques used in our analysis. An increase in renewable energy usage leads to a reduction of CO2 emissions, leading to improved environmental quality. This finding implies that renewable energy usage can be considered a moderating factor to balance the benefits from the trade agreement via an increase in trade activities which supports economic growth and the costs to the environment by limiting CO 2 emissions, which may lead to further environmental degradation. The finding is consistent under both estimation techniques. We note that this finding is consistent with [52,53].

Results of Granger causality test
Next, we use the [50] panel's Granger causality test to examine the relationship between economic growth, renewable energy usage and financial development. This analysis is important because the long-run relationships between these variables are confirmed in our analysis presented in section 5.4. Empirical results are presented in Table 9. We present these findings using the graphical causality relationship in Fig 1.

A robustness analysis-The extended analysis using different proxies for financial development
The financial development index reported from the IMF has been used as a proxy for financial development in our analysis. However, financial development is a multifaced phenomenon, and previous analyses have used different financial development proxies [54,55]. In this section, we use other indicators as the proxies for financial development. Our literature review indicates that each of the following seven indicators has been used as a proxy for financial development in previous studies, including (i) liquid liabilities to GDP; (ii) deposit money bank assets to GDP; (iii) private credit by deposit money banks to GDP; (iv) financial system deposits to GDP; (v) stock market capitalization to GDP; (vi) stock market total value traded to GDP, and (vii) stock market turnover ratio. As a result, in this robustness analysis, we re-estimate the Eq (1) using the CCEMG and the AMG estimation techniques for each of these seven proxies for financial development to enhance the robustness of our empirical findings. Table 10 presents the summary of statistics for seven proxies of financial development. Our empirical findings on the inter-relationship between economic growth, renewable energy usage and financial development are presented in Table 11 below. Our empirical findings fail to confirm the validity of the EKC hypothesis in CPTPP countries across seven proxies for financial development. This finding concerning the validity of the EKC hypothesis in the CPTPP countries is consistent with our previous finding. Findings from our robustness analyses confirm a positive relationship between energy consumption and CO 2 emissions in the CPTPP countries across all seven proxies for financial development. These findings imply that any increase in energy consumption due to an increase in economic activities for producing products and providing services is associated with an increase in CO 2 emission, leading to an increased environmental degradation in the CPTPP countries. This finding using different proxies of financial development is consistent with our conclusion on the effect of energy consumption from fossil fuel sources on CO 2 emission in previous analysis when the broad-based new financial development index from the IMF is used. Interestingly, renewable energy consumption is negatively and statistically significant to CO 2 emissions. This finding is consistent across seven different proxies of financial development, together with the IMF's broad-based financial development index, which is used in our previous analysis. Finally, we find no Table 9. The empirical results on the Granger causality relationship between economic growth, renewable energy usage and financial development in the CPTPP countries.

Hypothesis Z-bar Z-bar tilde Conclusion
GDPpc ! CO 2 8.257 ��� (0.00) 7.444 ��� (0.00) Unidirectional causality from economic growth to CO 2 emission. evidence to confirm an impact of financial development, regardless of the proxies, on CO 2 emissions for the CPTPP countries during the researched period. This finding is also consistent with our previous analysis when the broad-based financial development index is used. In addition, our robustness analysis is extended by considering the causality relationship between renewable energy usage, economic growth and each of seven proxies for financial development for the CPTPP countries. Fig 2 below graphically presents these causality relationship flows.

Conclusions and policy implications
The Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP), formerly the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), agreement of 11 countries, came into force in 2018 after the US withdrew in 2017 under a new government. The agreement has attracted great attention from other countries to join the pact, including the UK and China, in 2021. Implementing the CPTPP agreement has been considered a milestone in economic integration across 11 country members in different continents. Trade agreements are generally considered an effective mechanism to increase trade flows across members. Country members from this mega CPTPP agreement will benefit from improved comparative advantages of producing products and providing services. However, increasing trading activities may increase energy consumption and CO 2 emissions, leading to environmental degradation. In addition, an increase in trading activities may result in a further increase in financial development, which is required to support an increase in trading activities among the members. In order to achieve the dual benefits of trade agreements, the role of renewable energy in the national energy portfolio needs to be considered. We consider that renewable energy usage should be considered the moderating factor between enhancing trading activities, which support economic growth and financial development and improving environmental degradation by limiting CO 2 emissions from the CPTPP agreement. This paper examines the effects of renewable energy usage, financial development and economic growth on the environment for the countries joining the CPTPP agreement. Various proxies of financial development are used in this paper to enhance the robustness of the findings. Findings from this paper can be summarized as follows. First, renewable energy usage does reduce CO 2 emissions in the CPTPP countries. This finding supports the view that increasing the proportion of renewable energy in the national energy portfolio does improve the quality of the environment by reducing CO 2 emissions. This finding is consistent across different proxies of financial development used in our analysis. Second, energy consumption from fossil fuel sources does lead to an increase in CO 2 emissions. This finding implies that reducing the energy usage from fossil fuel sources is important in improving the quality of the environment. Renewable energy can be considered excellent energy sources to substitute fossil fuel sources to ensure that energy is sufficient to support economic growth and development in the CPTPP countries. Third, no evidence indicates that further financial development, which is required to support the increase in trade activities from the CPTPP agreement, leads to further environmental degradation. This finding implies that further financial development to support economic growth and development will not negatively affect the environmental quality in the CPTPP countries. In addition, our causality analysis demonstrates that the bilateral causality relationship between renewable energy usage, financial development and economic growth does exist in the CPTPP countries. This important finding emphasizes the importance of considering the combined effects of renewable energy usage, financial development and economic growth.
Policy implications have emerged based on these important findings from this paper for countries in the CPTPP agreement and other markets. The success of the CPTPP agreement in achieving the overall goal for the Trans-Pacific region appears to be impossible without the support of each country member. Each CPTPP country should have a solid commitment to sustainable development. First, each government in the Trans-Pacific region needs to play an active role in improving the quality of the environment. In using trade agreements to support economic growth, renewable energy appears to be a solution for these countries to achieve fundamental objectives of (i) sustainable economic growth and development and (ii) improved quality of the environment. An increase in trading activities from the CPTPP agreement cannot ignore the support from financial development. We consider that ensuring the financial system operate efficiently, implementing friendly-environmental regulations, and encouraging green investment in potential industries are the responsibility of each government in the CPTPP region. The role of the development of the financial system in supporting economic growth and in reducing pollutant emissions has been confirmed in this analysis. Second, an emphasis on microeconomic perspectives is of equal importance. Investing in green investment in such sectors like renewables, eco-innovations, and bio-products should be encouraged to attain sustainable growth. An efficient financial system also helps the transition towards green investment smoothly. Doing so will enhance policy effectiveness in institutional development, organizational culture, and market efficiency for the economic growth-renewable energy usage-financial development inter-relationship. Third, raising awareness of the importance of using energy-saving products and adopting renewable energy among individuals, households, and firms will help mitigate the level of pollutant emissions, leading to improved environmental quality.
Our study suffers limitations. The CPTPP agreement is a game-changer for many countries around the world. The expected benefits from this mega agreement are significant and diverse. Our analysis focuses only on the inter-relationship between three macroeconomic issues, including economic growth, renewable energy usage, and financial development. Future studies may need to consider other issues from this mega-trade agreement for many countries globally, including analyses on digital trade and e-commerce and the important roles of SMEs in economic growth and development in these CPTPP countries.